8,600 research outputs found
Experimental Studies of Markets with Buyers Ignorant of Quality Before Purchase: When do "Lemons" Drive out High Quality Products? A Report to the Federal Trade Commission
Experiments indicated that if sellers could not develop reputations for poor quality, then the market would consist entirely of poor quality products. The need to attract re-purchase is not sufficient incentive to have the seller build a reputation for supplying good quality, while the imposition of a requirement for truthful advertising or labelling is sufficient
Processing The Interspecies Quorum-Sensing Signal Autoinducer-2 (AI-2) Characterization Of Phospho-(S)-4,5-Dihydroxy-2,3-Pentanedione Isomerization By LsrG Protein
The molecule (S)-4,5-dihydroxy-2,3-pentanedione (DPD) is produced by many different species of bacteria and is the precursor of the signal molecule autoinducer-2 (AI-2). AI-2 mediates interspecies communication and facilitates regulation of bacterial behaviors such as biofilm formation and virulence. A variety of bacterial species have the ability to sequester and process the AI-2 present in their environment, thereby interfering with the cell-cell communication of other bacteria. This process involves the AI-2-regulated lsr operon, comprised of the Lsr transport system that facilitates uptake of the signal, a kinase that phosphorylates the signal to phospho-DPD (P-DPD), and enzymes (like LsrG) that are responsible for processing the phosphorylated signal. Because P-DPD is the intracellular inducer of the lsr operon, enzymes involved in P-DPD processing impact the levels of Lsr expression. Here we show that LsrG catalyzes isomerization of P-DPD into 3,4,4-trihydroxy-2-pentanone-5-phosphate. We present the crystal structure of LsrG, identify potential catalytic residues, and determine which of these residues affects P-DPD processing in vivo and in vitro. We also show that an lsrG deletion mutant accumulates at least 10 times more P-DPD than wild type cells. Consistent with this result, we find that the lsrG mutant has increased expression of the lsr operon and an altered profile of AI-2 accumulation and removal. Understanding of the biochemical mechanisms employed by bacteria to quench signaling of other species can be of great utility in the development of therapies to control bacterial behavior
An overview of jets and outflows in stellar mass black holes
In this book chapter, we will briefly review the current empirical
understanding of the relation between accretion state and and outflows in
accreting stellar mass black holes. The focus will be on the empirical
connections between X-ray states and relativistic (`radio') jets, although we
are now also able to draw accretion disc winds into the picture in a systematic
way. We will furthermore consider the latest attempts to measure/order jet
power, and to compare it to other (potentially) measurable quantities, most
importantly black hole spin.Comment: Accepted for publication in Space Science Reviews. Also to appear in
the Space Sciences Series of ISSI - The Physics of Accretion on to Black
Holes (Springer Publisher
Advances in the Understanding of the Genetic Determinants of Congenital Heart Disease and Their Impact on Clinical Outcomes
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143784/1/jah33022.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/143784/2/jah33022_am.pd
On the Role of the Accretion Disk in Black Hole Disk-Jet Connections
Models of jet production in black hole systems suggest that the properties of
the accretion disk - such as its mass accretion rate, inner radius, and
emergent magnetic field - should drive and modulate the production of
relativistic jets. Stellar-mass black holes in the "low/hard" state are an
excellent laboratory in which to study disk-jet connections, but few
coordinated observations are made using spectrometers that can incisively probe
the inner disk. We report on a series of 20 Suzaku observations of Cygnus X-1
made in the jet-producing low/hard state. Contemporaneous radio monitoring was
done using the Arcminute MicroKelvin Array radio telescope. Two important and
simple results are obtained: (1) the jet (as traced by radio flux) does not
appear to be modulated by changes in the inner radius of the accretion disk;
and (2) the jet is sensitive to disk properties, including its flux,
temperature, and ionization. Some more complex results may reveal aspects of a
coupled disk-corona-jet system. A positive correlation between the reflected
X-ray flux and radio flux may represent specific support for a plasma ejection
model of the corona, wherein the base of a jet produces hard X-ray emission.
Within the framework of the plasma ejection model, the spectra suggest a jet
base with v/c ~ 0.3, or the escape velocity for a vertical height of z ~ 20
GM/c^2 above the black hole. The detailed results of X-ray disk continuum and
reflection modeling also suggest a height of z ~ 20 GM/c^2 for hard X-ray
production above a black hole, with a spin in the range 0.6 < a < 0.99. This
height agrees with X-ray time lags recently found in Cygnus X-1. The overall
picture that emerges from this study is broadly consistent with some
jet-focused models for black hole spectral energy distributions in which a
relativistic plasma is accelerated at z = 10-100 GM/c^2.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Rapidly Evolving Disk-Jet Coupling during Re-brightenings in the Black Hole Transient MAXI J1535-571
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